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The problem of Industrial Pollution in Taiwan
As for underground water,
in 1989 the EPA initiated a four-year investigation
of 528 wells located in two cities and 10 counties.
It was found that 77 percent of the wells had a total
number of bacterium over the standard, 66 percent
had manganese over the standard, and 46.5 percent
had phenol over the standard. Moreover, 6 wells contained
too much cadmium, which may cause black-foot disease.
Since phenol is a pollutant produced by the industry
and not a natural element, the high percentage of
its existence in the wells tends to suggest that the
underground water in Taiwan had certainly been contaminated
by industry. (Chung-kuo shih-pao, 1993/10/02/3)
Furthermore, a report
in 1997 said that in the past 10 years, 30 to 40 percent
of the underground water contained too many amounts
of heavy metals.
The EPA had recognized the serious
situation of the underground water; however, there
was still no law to regulate it. (Chung-kuo shih-pao,
1997/12/08/7) The pollution also extended to the sea.
A report in 1992 based on the investigation done by
the Taiwan Provincial Environmental Protection Bureau
said that the sea around the island, especially around
the southwestern coast, had been polluted seriously
by heavy metals. Among seven kinds of metals, the
concentration of zinc was found to be the highest,
copper and mercury to be the next. Zinc pollution
was most seriously found along Tainan, Chiayi and
Kaohsiung Counties in that order.
Copper pollution
was most heavily found along Kaohsiung, Chiayi, and
Tainan Counties. Mercury pollution was most serious
along the coast of Pingtung County. (Lien-ho pao,
1992/07/20/3) It is notable that in November 1994,
at the river mouth of Chungkang ch'i in Miaoli County,
a large number of migration fish died suddenly. The
local fishermen recalled that the same event once
happened in 1980 and the head of the village sternly
condemned that the environmental protection authority
did not give enough efforts to control industrial
wastewater. (Chung-shih wan-pao, 1983/11/28/1) This
event shows than not only the sea around the southwestern
part but also around northern Taiwan was already endangered
by pollution.
When protests against
pollution are taken into account, during 1980-1996
water pollution-related events occurred 151 times.
Of this, 45 were related to enterprises, 23 related
to livestock farms, 23 related to garbage grounds,
22 related to the source of water, 16 related to wastewater
disposal plants, 10 related to river pollution, 7
related to drainage ditches, and 5 related to the
sea area. (Hsiao Hsin-huang, 1997: 95-126) These protests
helped to show the seriousness of Taiwan's water pollution.
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